Yes Mr Lane certainly was!
That is the whole point of fatigue management, not work diaries etc but proper management of fatigue.
We have procedures that a)prevent excessive hours to begin with, b) if for some unplanned reason excessive hours are going to be worked (usually breakdowns) then those involved do not drive home they are taken home by taxi or company car & picked up the next day.
We also have Fitness for work procedures which cover things like partying all night & coming to work next day (don't bother), having a second job (if you do you may put your primary job at risk if there is a fatigue risk). This particular procedure impacts on our employee's who are members of ESO's as we don't want people at work who have spent all night/ week at an incident (leave is given - comes off employee's AL entitlement).
So as you can see the management of fatigue is a big issue not just on the fire ground, and it can be managed it just takes a bit of planning & organisation.
Finally everyone is responsible for their safety, so if you are tired - don't drive! And insist on proper fatigue management provisions, I know its hard sometimes (been guilty myself
) but I know that the most important person is me & at the end of the day I'm the best one to look after myself
Take care keep safe
cheers